On Thu, 24 July 2008, Jakub Narębski wrote: > On Thu, 24 July 2008, Stephan Beyer wrote: >> Jakub Narebski wrote: >>> Dnia środa 23. lipca 2008 16:54, Robin Rosenberg napisał >>>> onsdagen den 23 juli 2008 15.18.40 skrev Johannes Schindelin: >>>>> On Wed, 23 Jul 2008, Jakub Narebski wrote: >>>>>> On Wed, 23 Jul 2008, Johannes Schindelin wrote: >>>>>>> On Wed, 23 Jul 2008, Jakub Narebski wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> 04. Which programming languages you are proficient with? >>>>>>>> (The choices include programming languages used by git) >>>>>>>> (zero or more: multiple choice) >>>>>>>> - C, shell, Perl, Python, Tcl/Tk >>>>>>>> + (should we include other languages, like C++, Java, PHP, >>>>>>>> Ruby,...?) >> [...] > > If we want to provide larger number of programming languages to > chose from (with "other" as fallback), we could take for example > top 10 from the TIOBE index, or similar sites: > http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html (for July 2008) > http://lui.arbingersys.com/index.html (Language Usage Indicators, Jul 10, 2008) > > This would bring 'Visual Basic', and perhaps 'Assembly' and 'Lisp' > to the list of choices. Perhaps also consider GitHub's list of most popular languages http://github.com/blog/99-popular-languages (as mentioned in Petr 'Pasky' Baudis somewhere in git-scm.com thread) to take into account git popularity among web developers. This would add 'ERB' (or is it just subset of 'Ruby' as eRuby implementation?), and 'Common Lisp' (if 'Common Lisp', then probably also 'Scheme'/'Guile'). There is always free-form 'other'... -- Jakub Narebski Poland -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html